Great music few are aware of. Any genre.


To start with :
1. Al di Meola - Cielo e Terra. Vinyl, Japanese sounds best,
2. Sussan Deyhim - Madman of God. CD.
3. Hellborg/Velez - Ars Moriende. CD, track Love Death Ritual.
4.Steve Roach/Jorge Reyes - Vine Bark&Spore. CD. Atmospheric, tribal ambient.
inna
The original Rockabilly artists, like The Rock 'n' Roll Trio (Johnny Burnette and his brother Dorsey, along with Telecaster guitarist Paul Burlinson, a favorite of Jeff Beck). There are hundreds of others, released on small, independent, regional labels in the mid-to-late 1950's. The original version of white Rock 'n' Roll, it's the blend of Jump Blues and Hillbilly.
bdp24 10-26-2017
...The Rock ’n’ Roll Trio (Johnny Burnette and his brother Dorsey, along with Telecaster guitarist Paul Burlinson, a favorite of Jeff Beck).
My wife and I recently enjoyed hearing "The Train Kept a-Rollin" on SiriusXM while we were out for a drive. Prior to some other mentions you’ve made of the R&R Trio in past threads here I had only been aware of JB’s later and of course very different solo hits. I think the car enjoyed hearing it too, because the incredible energy level of the music caused it to be going a good deal faster at the end of the song than when it started :-)

Best regards,
-- Al

rob, that's hard to listen to for me, not that I don't like dark energy stuff.
ghosthouse, your #1 and #2 are very nice, #4 maybe too.

Yeah, Al! The first version I heard of "Train Kept A Rollin’ " was in 1965, that by The Yardbirds with of course Jeff Beck on guitar. It’s a great version, and I was amazed in 1977 when I heard a version I liked even more, that of The Rock ’n’ Roll Trio. Absolute killer! Johnny Burnette’s scream in the song is on a Little Richard level---as good as it gets. The R & R Trio created an incredible feeling of tension, which requires the musicians to "hold back" in a way that’s hard to explain but easy to hear. The Who were good at that too, no more so than in "I Can See For Miles". Most bands are all about release, not first creating the tension which makes the release so, ahem, satisfying.

Tension and release, what makes the best Rock ’n’ Roll so sexual. Elvis’ early stuff is full of it, as is the work of Rock ’n’ Roll master Dave Edmunds. Listen to Dave’s guitar solo in his 1970 recording of the Dave Bartholomew song "I Hear You Knocking", a hit for Smiley Lewis in the mid-50’s. The held-back tension in the song is palpable, and then Dave’s guitar solo kicks it up a notch, his note-timing creating the most intense tension-and-release I’ve heard in music. XXX-Rated, baby!

Dave and Robert Plant are close friends, and both fans of the Blues and Hillbilly from which Rock ’n’ Roll evolved. Dave was one of the guitarists being considered as replacement for Brian Jones in The Stones. Luckily, he didn’t get the gig, and ended up creating the real "Best Rock ’n’ Roll Band In The World" (the claim to that title by The Rolling Stones notwithstanding) with Nick Lowe, Billy Bremmer, and Terry Williams---Rockpile. One of the maybe four best bands I’ve seen live, the other two being Little Village, NRBQ, and of course The Band. The Beatles weren’t very good when I saw them live in '65, by the way.